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Jiang, Feng; Hyland, Ken – Written Communication, 2023
Research abstracts are an increasingly important aspect of research articles in all knowledge fields, summarizing the full article and encouraging readers to access it. Graetz suggests that four main features contribute to this purpose--the use of past tense, third person, passive, and the non-use of negatives, although this claim has never been…
Descriptors: Change, Documentation, Written Language, Writing for Publication
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Zhang, Yan; Hyland, Ken – Written Communication, 2022
The process of responding to supervisory feedback requires student writers to position themselves toward both the provider and content of that feedback, indicating their stance in the interaction and their evolving disciplinary competence. How positionings are discursively shaped, developed, and enacted to influence thesis revisions, however, has…
Descriptors: Graduate Students, Masters Theses, Supervision, Writing (Composition)
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Hyland, Ken; Jiang, Feng – Applied Linguistics, 2019
In this article we explore the ways in which academic citation practices have changed over the past 50 years. Based on the analysis of a corpus of 2.2 million words from the same leading journals in four disciplines in 1965, 1985, and 2015, we document a substantial rise in citations over the period, particularly in applied linguistics and…
Descriptors: Citations (References), Computational Linguistics, Preferences, Verbs
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Hyland, Ken; Jiang, Feng – Written Communication, 2016
Successful research writers construct texts by taking a novel point of view toward the issues they discuss while anticipating readers' imagined reactions to those views. This intersubjective positioning is encompassed by the term stance and, in various guises, has been a topic of interest to researchers of written communication and applied…
Descriptors: Attitude Change, Written Language, Applied Linguistics, Academic Discourse
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Hyland, Ken – Written Communication, 2010
Recent research has emphasized the close connections between writing and the construction of an author's identity. While academic contexts privilege certain ways of making meanings and so restrict what resources participants can bring from their past experiences, we can also see these writing conventions as a repertoire of options that allow…
Descriptors: Authors, Self Concept, Academic Discourse, Identification
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Hyland, Ken; Tse, Polly – International Journal of English Studies, 2009
The presence of unfamiliar words and expressions in academic texts is a serious obstacle to students reading in a second language. EAP has responded to this challenge by taking the view that there is a common core of academic vocabulary which is frequent across an academic register. This paper briefly considers this view by examining the range,…
Descriptors: Word Lists, English for Academic Purposes, Intellectual Disciplines, Vocabulary
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Hyland, Ken – English for Specific Purposes, 2008
Despite his considerable influence on the development of ESP and all our professional lives, almost nothing has been written about John Swales' distinctive prose style. Based on a 340,000 word corpus comprising 14 single-authored papers and most chapters from his three main books, this paper sets out to identify the main features of this style.…
Descriptors: Applied Linguistics, Discourse Analysis, Writing (Composition), English for Special Purposes
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Hyland, Ken – Applied Linguistics, 2007
A great deal of research has now established that written texts embody interactions between writers and readers, but few studies have examined the ways that small acts of reformulation and exemplification help contribute to this. Abstraction, theorisation and interpretation need to be woven into a text which makes sense to a particular community…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Applied Linguistics, Rhetoric, Language Processing